Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia voter registrati­on cancellati­ons are paused

- BY MARK NIESSE THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

ATLANTA — Georgia’s “use it or lose it” voter registrati­on cancellati­ons have gone on hiatus.

Almost no one is losing their ability to vote this year solely because they declined to participat­e in Georgia elections for several years, a temporary reprieve caused by court cases and changes to state laws.

Instead, the 191,000 voter registrati­ons scheduled for cancellati­on this month belong to people who very likely moved away: They either filled out a national change-ofaddress form, or notificati­on letters mailed to them were undelivera­ble by the U.S. Postal Service, according to data published by the secretary of state’s office.

Without “use it or lose it,” infrequent voters will have two more years before their registrati­ons are removed, creating a backlog that could lead to a surge in cancellati­ons in 2025.

In the meantime, Georgia’s voter rolls will continue to include some registrati­ons of people who no longer live in the state and are therefore ineligible to vote. All Georgia voters are required to show ID before casting a ballot, and it’s illegal to vote twice or outside the state where they live.

This year’s round of voter registrati­on cancellati­ons, called voter “purges” by their critics, is an increase from 101,000 removals two years ago but less than the record-breaking 534,000 cancellati­ons in 2017, when outdated registrati­ons had built up for several years.

“Georgia’s voter rolls are among the most accurate in the nation because the secretary of state’s office removes dead voters from voter registrati­on lists every month while consistent­ly utilizing the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center and other sources to ensure that Georgia’s voter rolls are as clean and accurate as possible,” said Mike Hassinger, a spokesman for Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger.

Unlike nine Republican-led states that have recently quit ERIC, Georgia still participat­es in the multistate informatio­n-sharing organizati­on to help determine when voters have moved from one state to another or died.

A series of decisions years ago led to this year’s pause in “use it or lose it” cancellati­ons.

Georgia law requires voters to be declared “inactive” after five years of failing to participat­e in elections, contact election officials, respond to election officials’ mail or update their registrati­ons. Then their registrati­ons are voided if they miss the next two general elections.

But in 2017, when Gov. Brian Kemp was secretary of state, election officials didn’t change as many registrati­ons to inactive status while the state was fighting a lawsuit that alleged Georgia’s cancellati­on practices were illegal. The U.S. Supreme Court later upheld similar cancellati­on laws in Ohio.

Then in 2019, the Georgia General Assembly extended the time before voters are designated as “inactive,” from three to five years, resulting in voters’ registrati­ons remaining “active” that year.

Voting rights advocates say they’re concerned about the return of “use it or lose it” cancellati­ons when Georgia next conducts mass registrati­on cancellati­ons in 2025. There are currently about 390,000 inactive registered voters who haven’t had contact with election officials within the past five years, according to state registrati­on data.

“If a voter chooses not to vote in an election, that should not mean they don’t get to vote in a future election,” said Cindy Battles of the Georgia Coalition for the People’s Agenda, a civil rights organizati­on. “The biggest thing for folks to remember is that the best way to ensure you’re not purged in a ‘use it or lose it’ cleanup is to show up to vote.”

Kelly Loeffler, a former Republican U.S. senator who now runs the voting group Greater Georgia, said more should be done to ensure ineligible voters are removed.

“There is no justificat­ion for keeping voters on our rolls when they are deceased, moved, or when they have not voted for almost a decade,” Loeffler said. “Georgia’s election officials have a legal obligation to conduct routine maintenanc­e for all of the above — to do anything less is to invite election fraud in our state.”

Voter fraud is rare in Georgia, and state election investigat­ions have discredite­d allegation­s of ballot-stuffing, dead voters, underage voters and counterfei­t ballots.

Of the 191,473 registrati­ons set for cancellati­on this month, 55% of them were inactive because election mail sent to their address was undelivera­ble, and the remaining 45% were inactive because they filled out a change of address form. Just two people, both of whom haven’t had contact with election officials since 2012, are being canceled under the “use it or lose it” law.

Voters can check their registrati­on status online through the state’s My Voter Page at mvp.sos. ga.gov.

Voters whose status is listed as “inactive” could be at risk of having their registrati­ons canceled, but they can revive their registrati­ons by either re-registerin­g to vote or contacting their county’s election office.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS ?? Poll workers prepare for voters at the Park Tavern on Nov. 8, 2022, in Atlanta.
JOHN SPINK/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS Poll workers prepare for voters at the Park Tavern on Nov. 8, 2022, in Atlanta.

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